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Jim Durrell Recreation Centre

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Operator
  
City of Ottawa

Phone
  
+1 613-247-4811

Owner
  
City of Ottawa

Construction cost
  
217,200 USD

Broke ground
  
November 16, 1962

Province
  
Ontario

Team
  
Ottawa Jr. Senators

Jim Durrell Recreation Centre

Location
  
1265 Walkley Road, Ottawa, Ontario K1V 6P9

Capacity
  
2,000 Peplinski Arena 200 Walkley Arena

Surface
  
Dual-pad, Multi-surface Peplinski Arena Walkley Arena

Architect
  
J.L. Richards and Associates

Address
  
1265 Walkley Rd, Ottawa, ON K1V 6P9, Canada

Similar
  
Sandy Hill Arena, Nepean Sportsplex, Walter Baker Sports Ce, Earl Armstrong Arena, Bell Centennial Arena

The Jim Durrell Recreation Centre is a multi-purpose dual-pad arena in Ottawa, Ontario. It is located in the south end of the city on Walkley road close to the intersection of Bank street. The Ottawa Jr. Senators of the Central Canada Hockey League are its primary tenant.

History

The Jim Durrell Recreation Centre started off as the Walkley Arena. It was the second City of Ottawa owned arena after the Elmgrove Park Arena in the west end. City council debated on whether to build two arenas but ultimately decided to start with the one on Walkley first and then build their third arena on a lot they owned at the intersections of Chamberlain and Lyon. Initial costs for the ne arena were to be $170,000 but increased by $30,000 by November 1962 when work began. Strangely enough, the City saved somewhere between $5,000 to $15,000 by not installing showers in the four dressing rooms. The contract was awarded to Abel Construction, and the architectural firm was J.L. Richards and Associates. Several names were proposed for the new arena, among them were, Senator's Memorial Arena, Colonel By Arena and Billings Arena, the Silver Seven Stadium (to commemorate the Silver Seven hockey team which won the Stanley Cup in 1903, 1904 and 1905), but it was eventually decided to simply keep it as Walkley Arena.

In January 1984, 300 residents of Ottawa South presented the a petition to city planners requesting a new arena be built to help with the 2000 hockey and ringette players and figure skaters. Ald. Brian Bourns considered a $2-to $3-million arena far too expensive and thought doubling Walkley Arena was the better solution.

References

Jim Durrell Recreation Centre Wikipedia